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Re: Explorer.exe Crash on right click
This appears to be happening again with the Power Archiver 2022 shell extensions.
When I have Use Explorer Shell Extensions enabled in Power Archiver Configuration and right-click on c:\Users\username\Start Menu, (hidden Junction file), File Explorer crashes.
I have version 21.00.15 (03/2022) 64-bit installed in Windows 10 Version 21H2 (Build 19044.1826).
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In the latest version of PA, on W11 (latest build/SP) when you try to use the first level context menu - NOTHING HAPPENS (particularly when you do this from Downloads or Documents folders) - however I noticed that it DOES WORK when you use the context menu from the Desktop. Going to the second level context menu does work however.
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PA 2023 22.00.08
Long time no seeing. So I start up the new year with a first problem : the virtual driver cannot be installed. Reason : it is missing in the Fast Ring PatchBeam Update Service…
Virtual driver PA 2023-01-28 152607.png
It seems a standard problem with new releases :-)
Can I have a link or can it be fixed. Thank you. CU later -
When the function for testing archives is invoked via the shell context menu (PowerArchiver > Test) then all the files in the archive get extracted to the current folder.
The test dialog reports as many errors as there are files in the archive but it fails to give any hint as to which files are supposed to be erroneous or what the nature of the problem might be. Comparing the extracted files to the originals shows no differences at all.
The .7z in question was produced with maximised compression settings in 7zip (taking forever but resulting in smaller archives than .7z produced by PowerArchiver with maximised settings). Therefore I wanted to see whether PowerArchiver can at least test .7z that it produced itself. Hence I had PowerArchiver convert a .pa with the same contents to .7z. There weren’t any errors reported but the resulting .7z contained fewer than half of the files contained in the .pa (137 of 366), so I scratched that test.
Performance is abysmal when testing via the context menu (e.g. almost 2 minutes for testing a .7z that 7zip tests in 4 seconds), but that is most likely due to the fact that the extracted files are written to disk. Testing the same .7z in the PowerArchiver GUI takes only 8 seconds but causes the mysterious appearance of a UAC dialog, as reported elsewhere.
The testing function is vital because PowerArchiver has a history of producing archives that it cannot unpack without errors or that do not conform to the respective file format standards (e.g. ZIP) so that other programs report them as erroneous.
The point of creating archives is that the files in them will most likely have to be extracted at some point. If the extraction cannot be guaranteed to produce correct results then the whole program is absolutely pointless. Actually, worse than pointless - it causes data loss and hence damage.
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In PowerArchiver 2023 22.00.06 configuration, the option labelled “Start PowerArchiver 2023 Starter when my computer starts” seems to be redundant.
I am only allowed to change this option when PA Starter is disabled, and then it seems to be ignored.
When I enable PA Starter this option is forced to the enabled state.
I think it’d be good to remove “Start PowerArchiver 2023 Starter when my computer starts” completely. I’ve always found it confusing having both options.
Added later: However i don’t particularly want to use queue but I do like having the PAStarter icon in my tray area.
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W10 Pro 22H2 - 64 -bit
PA 22.00.06 (PA 2023)
It has been the case with previous versions of PowerArchiver, but I had hoped that the latest might behave differently. Not so, I’m afraid.
I have, for various obscure reasons, created a few .pa archives, mainly in the hope that they will save me some more space. From time to time, I use the “Test” option to check that important archives are OK and uncorrupted.
With every .pa archive I’ve tested, the process runs through OK but then reports that there are errors. This is always the number of files in the archive e.g. if 11 files, then 11 errors reported.
In the .pa, I can:-
preview the files (usually PDF) extract some or all files and look at or use them convert the .pa to a .zip or .zipx archive, which then works fine and tests without errorsIs it the case that the Test routine isn’t designed for .pa archives, or is there another reason? Although the .pa seems to function properly, despite the test reporting errors, I would like to be sure that every .pa is OK and not “broken”.
Some of the .pas are quite old and produced with earlier PA versions (they are truly “archives”). If I extract all the files in the old .pa, create a new, fresh .pa and add back the files to that, then test the new, no errors (at least in the .pa I’ve tried this on) are reported. This would suggest a mismatch between old .pas and newer versions of PA itself.
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Clipboard02.jpg
See the, supposedly, blank space where the green box is? It’s like that in Modern Light theme too. I can toggle it, but it’s missing text or shouldn’t be there I guess?
Thanks :)
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Dear @Alpha-Testers and all of our users,
time has come for testing of PowerArchiver and PACL for macOS.
Please let us know here if you have Mac and can test latest builds.Features implemented:
PowerArchiver 2020 - tabbing, opening, extracting, adding, testing, favorite folders, support for multiple languages, opening via Finder, explorer mode, installer.
PACL 10 - support for most formats and features in Windows version.Upcoming: Tools such as archive converter, batch zip, multi-extract.
To start testing, please sign up here in this thread, and we will send you latest build.
thank you!
Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h54m56s_008_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h55m05s_009_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h55m14s_010_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h55m30s_011_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h55m39s_012_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h55m49s_013_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h56m00s_014_.png Ashampoo_Snap_Wednesday, November 20, 2019_12h54m43s_007_.png
76e97ab9-8d75-4175-9ce8-446500031f38-image.png
PA Comparison with WinZip is unfair
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On the main PA web page you claim
“Create unlimited sized ZIP files with fast and strong compression that outperforms WinZip.”
While this is probably true, and PA does create slightly smaller ZIP archives. WinZip has a crucial advantage over PA in that it automatically detects if the archive will be bigger than 4GB or contain over 65535 files. This is why the ZIP archives are slightly bigger.
PA has to have this option set by the user before the archive is created.
Don’t get me wrong, I prefer PA and it is my main archiver, but I think PA should also have this feature.
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I support this wish ;)
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Hi,
PowerArchiver has an option “Make large ZIP archive”, which will automatically detect if you need to use 4.5 spec format for large archives. If you check this option, and create smaller file than 4 GB- PowerArchiver will correctly detect that you do not need PkWare 4.5 format and will use 2.0 format instead.
That has nothing to do with compression size, they both store same header info, PowerArchiver just creates smaller archives…
thanks for the thought…
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Why bother having this option in the first place then ? There’s no point.
You might as well enable this option by default, and remove the option from the GUI. Insted you could replace it with an option “Notify if Zip64 archive created” which, if enabled, would display a message telling the user that “…a Zip64 archive was created. This will only be compatible with other applications that support the Zip64 standard.”
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PowerArchiver has an option “Make large ZIP archive”, which will automatically detect if you need to use 4.5 spec format for large archives. If you check this option, and create smaller file than 4 GB- PowerArchiver will correctly detect that you do not need PkWare 4.5 format and will use 2.0 format instead.
But in this thread, you wrote: “Flag makes PA create archives in PkZip 4.5 format, and a lot of other archives can not read files create with 4.5 format…”. Isn’t that a contradiction? :confused:
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Why bother having this option in the first place then ? There’s no point.
You might as well enable this option by default, and remove the option from the GUI. Insted you could replace it with an option “Notify if Zip64 archive created” which, if enabled, would display a message telling the user that “…a Zip64 archive was created. This will only be compatible with other applications that support the Zip64 standard.”
Option was originally made long time ago - when nobody but PA and PkWare had support for creating large archives, so most likely by creating this kind of archive you would not be able to share it with anyone.
We were already planning to remove it from PA 2005 since by now there are enough programs that support PkWare 4.5 to make it redundant.
thanks!
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I still don’t fully understand because in your original reply you said that PA would use 2.0 format when possible, only using the new 4.5 standard (ie. Zip64) when the resultant archive would be larger than 4GB or it contained more than 65535 files in it.
If this is the case, then there was never really a need for this option in the first place.
From a previous post by you a while back, you said that if this option was not enabled and you tried to create an archive greater than 4GB or with more than 65535 files, it would create a broken archive.
I’m confused……
Does PA automatically detect if 4.5 standard should be used, or not ?
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With the flag NOT checked, PA uses 2.0 format and does not check if this results in an invalid archive.
With the flag checked, PA uses 2.0 format unless Archive would be greater than 4GB - in which case it uses 4.5 format. Checking the number of files 65535 is easy to understand.
Just wondering, without performing the compression first - how does PA “guess” the (not yet) generated Archive size ? Presumably this also depends on the actual compression options : maximum, normal, store etc.
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With the flag NOT checked, PA uses 2.0 format and does not check if this results in an invalid archive.
With the flag checked, PA uses 2.0 format unless Archive would be greater than 4GB - in which case it uses 4.5 format. Checking the number of files 65535 is easy to understand.
Just wondering, without performing the compression first - how does PA “guess” the (not yet) generated Archive size ? Presumably this also depends on the actual compression options : maximum, normal, store etc.
Now I get it. Has someone checked that PA automatically creates a 4.5 format archive with an archive that ends up larger than 4GB but has less than 65535 files ?
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I personally dont have technical knowledge of how does our zip component do that - originally we were not too trusty if it will actually correctly work (if it will be able to correctly guess which format to use) but after few years of using it - it works fine. Without looking at ZIP header/central directory info, I would guess it is done “on the fly” - since header information is different for each file.
So if you leave “Make large zip archive” checked, PowerArchiver will automatically detect if 4.5 format needs to be used or not. It might seem as if option is not needed anymore, but again - at the time we introduced it, it was needed or at least we thought it was so.
In any case, you are safe to leave it checked and it will work perfectly fine.
thanks,
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Now I get it. Has someone checked that PA automatically creates a 4.5 format archive with an archive that ends up larger than 4GB but has less than 65535 files ?
Yep, it has been working fine for 2.5 years now. As mentioned above, I think it is done on the fly so once treshold is reached, 4.5 format is used.
thanks,